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Bill

Bill

HB 2565

Partnerships; limited liability partnerships; prohibiting certain state actors from certain actions; classification; effective date.

2026 Regular Session Introduced by Julie Daniels and 1 co-sponsor

HB 2565 restricted certain state actors' authority over partnerships and LLCs but died in conference after the House and Senate couldn't reach compromise on final language.

Died in conference
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Bill Summary · HB 2565

Legislative bill overview

HB 2565 modifies Oklahoma law regarding partnerships and limited liability partnerships while imposing restrictions on certain state actors from taking unspecified actions. The bill ultimately died in conference committee on May 30, 2025, before reaching final passage.

Why is this important

The bill's vague language makes its real-world impact difficult to assess from the title alone, but restrictions on state actors' authority could affect regulatory enforcement, business licensing, or administrative oversight of business entities. The failure to reach compromise in conference suggests substantive disagreement between House and Senate versions existed.

Potential points of contention

  • Unclear scope of restrictions: The bill's title doesn't specify which state actors or which actions are prohibited, suggesting the restrictions were controversial enough that compromise couldn't be reached
  • Business regulation balance: Any limitations on state regulatory authority over partnerships and LLCs involve tension between business freedom and consumer/creditor protections
  • Vague enforcement mechanisms: Without knowing the classification level or effective date provisions, it's unclear how disputes over restricted state actions would be resolved

Compiled from official sources — confirm details with the bill’s official record.

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